Wednesday, November 28, 2001 THE BATTALION Page 5 )/ Human cloning company faces stiff competition, legal battles SWEATSHIRTS • (excludes embroidered designs, while supplies last) $45 roots I SAN FRANCISCO (AP) —A testament to the aggressiveness of chief executive Michael West, Advanced Cell Technology garnered a whirlwind of publicity with its claim to be the first to clone a human embryo. I The accomplishment is preliminary, though, history major.'. 31111 by no means guarantees success in a tough with their par business climate. Competitors claim patents and heniehtbdor W-Lisive commercial rights to cloning and the ■oduction of human embryonic stem cells — the ultimate goal of Advanced Cell. I Political opposition is formidable as well. A House bill criminalizing human cloning awaits debate in the Senate and President George W. Bush on Monday called Advanced Cell’s work td public policy and morally wrong.” In an interview Monday, West defended his :ision to announce the tentative breakthrough. “We didn’t have any ulterior motives. We sim- I) wanted to advance science and medicine,” Best said. “I have a sense of urgency, because ople are dying.” Scientists hope they can coax human embryon- ] _stem cells to grow into replacement cells to heal Ithe sick and ailing. 1 But some supporters of stem cell research said jest’s announcement Sunday in the relatively Biknown online journal, e-biomed: The Journal of Regenerative Medicine, may set back progress pice it lacked sufficient scientific data. It was not clear whether the embryos Advanced |ell cloned would be capable of growing into a man being. The embryos died even before any Rem cells were produced. Ini Glenn McGee, a University of Pennsylvania •n. In this situaiio r* oet b lcls L resigned from Advanced Cell cnt places andth;:i’ ec * ln °logy’s ethics advisory board last year views. Kiou". » cause he said West wasn't being public enough friends at first J with his research. same mutual fricw Now, McGee says West made the opposite mis- rv realized that eJ 6 — to ° much publicity without any substance, riences were the* He suggested West made the announcement .■ patient whenlisi{ilf t:i1ia turely in part to stake a claim to human aat may seemirrelflcloning as its exclusive intellectual property — a ity. these stork' cljiarge West denied. rstandingofeadij The U.S. Patent Office has rejected previous iendships to nattSquests for patents on human cloning. Nonetheless, aology has also Advanced Cell did receive a patent for technology ivolving non-human mammals in May. West claims that patent also gives the company elusive rights to profit from cloning human embryos to obtain “inner cell mass cells,” precur- parents know \mi e going and arounii lome," Park said U are responsible aili : your own decisi®' they become ctae •ge. Jen Vickery,asa lajor, said her rels nas changed siiw s ith my parent) no longer dictai; ■e now have a r ings also underg one another often rh other’s comps ■ed as a waste oi aer y ounger broil he house, le to spend a lo: ■nger competed ft conversions sors to embryonic stem cells that are formed in the earliest days of pregnancy. If the tiny company survives the political and sci entific challenges ahead, it hopes to invoke this patent as it battles other intellectual property claims. The University of Wisconsin now holds the patent for isolating human embryonic stem cells, and any U.S. company wanting to profit from the science must first get the school’s permission. Geron Corp. funded most of Wisconsin’s stem cell research and owns significant and exclusive commercial rights to the work. The exact scope of those rights, however, are the subject of a pending federal lawsuit the university filed against Geron in August. | THIS FRIDAY, SATURDAY, & SUNDAY ONIYI ore in touch. >ost of my homei once a week Ihrt int messenger." es me to be update® ir life, so 1 amabki even when ow students cl k said maintaininj juires effort w wild take advantaj ae at home and ret ions gift family k said. "Before t of college and« A recipe for controversy Recent efforts to clone a human embryo were meant to develop genetically compatible replacement cells for patients, not human clones, says the company that conducted the experiments. Cell swap One method used by the researchers — nuclear transfer - has been successful in cloning sheep and other animals. A needle is used to puncture the wall of a mature egg and remove its genetic material. A cumulus cell, a remnant from the ovary, is inserted into the emptied egg. This cell is meant to provide genetic material for the developing egg - and the resulting stem cells. Added chemicals and other growth factors fool the egg into dividing, as if it had been fertilized by a sperm. Cell division should have resulted in a blastocyst, a hollow ball of about 100 cells containing stem cells. But the few experimental eggs that began dividing stopped at four or six cells. Egg reprogramming The other method - parthenogenesis — differs from classic cloning. Normally, a mature Using eggs donated egg and sperm during this early stage, each supply half of researchers activate them an embryo’s 46 with chemicals that chromosomes. But change their concentration before maturity, the of charged ions, egg possesses a C' -. full set of genes. / After five days of cell division, some of the eggs had developed into blastocysts. But inside, none of them held the cells that yield stem cells. 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